116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
#14 Powerful tornado rips through Marshalltown | The Gazette Top Stories 2018
Dec. 27, 2018 4:51 pm, Updated: Jun. 7, 2022 8:33 am
As we take a look back at 2018, The Gazette newsroom assembled a list of our top stories of the year. Be sure to follow along as we count down to number 1!
An EF3 tornado with peak winds of 144 mph — the strongest storm in Iowa since 2015 — in July ripped through downtown Marshalltown and nearby neighborhoods, causing estimated damages of more than $30 million.
Despite the severity of the storm, public safety officials said it caused no deaths or major injuries.
It did rip the top tower off a more-than-century old courthouse, knock down building roofs and facades, smash cars and toss trees. Marshalltown — a town of 27,000 east of Ames — saw damage in six to eight blocks west of its downtown and another 12 blocks to the east.
Federal and state aid totaled $8.2 million, but state officials said damage to buildings and infrastructure in town exceeded $30 million, most of it covered by insurance.
The Marshalltown tornado was one in a string of storms July 19 across Iowa — with an EF2 striking Bondurant, two EF1s touching down near Keosauqua in Van Buren County and an EF3 hitting the Vermeer equipment manufacturing plant in Pella.
After the storm, Marshalltown officials scrambled to get thousands back on the power grid and set up an emergency shelter while homeowners worked to repair their properties.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency denied an appeal from Gov. Kim Reynolds to make its Individual Assistance Program available to residents and businesses affected by the July 19 tornadoes.
However, President Donald Trump declared Marshall County a presidential disaster in September and Polk County a presidential disaster in August, making public assistance funds available to both counties.
• Comments: (319) 339-3172; maddy.arnold@thegazette.com
Buildings and cars were heavily damaged in downtown Marshalltown in the aftermath of a July 19 tornado. (Rebecca F. Miller/The Gazette)
Marshalltown Mayor Joel Greer talks July 20 with Gov. Kim Reynolds about damage as they walk around the city center in the wake of an EF3 tornado that struck the day before. Temporary shelters were set up for those who lost houses and emergency crews worked relentlessly to remove debris and downed power lines. (Rebecca F. Miller/The Gazette)

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